Al-Qaeda-linked Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who allegedly masterminded the siege of an Algerian gas plant (AFP File photo )
Officials at Joint Special Operations Command had found the uncatchable man - they were sure of it.
Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a legendary Algerian militant, had eluded capture across North Africa and the Sahel for a dozen years, defying reports of his death to continue a campaign of kidnappings and guerrilla attacks. The United States and its allies had missed him before.
But in June of last year, JSOC, the secretive military outfit tasked with hunting al-Qaida, thought it had Belmokhtar in its sights as he made his way to a dusty farm outside of Ajdabiya, in eastern Libya, where a group of militants assembled for a meeting.
American officials had been on high alert for several days.
Belmokhtar and his associates were famously disciplined in avoiding electronic communications and cloaking their movements, but someone had slipped up. When two American F-15 jets screamed across the sky and unleashed several 500-pound bombs, they demolished the farmhouse, killing at least five militants.
But eight months later, U.S. military and intelligence agencies remain unsure whether Belmokhtar was indeed killed in the operation. The internal debate that followed the strike illustrates the challenges inherent to targeted attacks in places where the United States has little military presence, such as Libya, Syria, Yemen or Pakistan.
"We took a shot, but we could never really confirm his demise," said one U.S. official who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberations.
As President Barack Obama prepares to step down, the uncertainty highlights the sometimes limited intelligence surrounding strikes that have become a hallmark of his response to militant threats overseas.
Inconclusive outcomes such as this one may become more common if the next president builds on Obama's counterterrorism strategy, which has sought to minimize U.S. troop deployments by employing Special Operations raids and airstrikes to target scores of jihadists from South Asia to Africa in recent years.
Civil liberties activists have also been pressing for more details about targeted killings. A federal appeals court on Wednesday heard arguments about whether the government should be more transparent about drone strikes in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.
While many officials are confident that Belmokhtar was killed, the reservations of other officials have been sufficient to stop the Obama administration from declaring "jackpot" - in military jargon, a conclusive hit against a militant target.
The possibility that Belmokhtar was not among those killed or wounded that day raises troubling questions about who the strike may have killed in his stead, and how the attack may have affected his followers, who have launched several bloody attacks since last fall.
Emily Horne, a White House spokeswoman, said that the Obama administration would continue to work to stop militant plots against the United States "whenever it is necessary, using the full range of tools at our disposal."
One former senior official said that the remote strikes were one of the few tools the United States could use in areas that do not permit an on-the-ground U.S. presence. Precision munitions launched by drones or high-tech fighter jets, advocates say, mean less collateral damage than bombing raids of days past. "The problem is that they are going to take place in areas that are ungoverned and . . . you don't have a clear partner" who can help verify the outcome.
Adding to the complexity, the U.S. government often has little visibility in those areas.
"There's a broader issue relating to the limits of their intelligence capabilities," said Jameel Jaffer, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union. "There's only so much you can learn from surveillance conducted from 15,000 feet, and their human intelligence is very limited in some of the places where they're carrying out strikes."
The June 14 strike was the culmination of a years-long international effort against Belmokhtar, also known as "Mr. Marlboro," "the Uncatchable" and "the One-Eyed" for the disfigurement he suffered to his face handling weapons as a young man.
A native of Algeria, Belmokhtar trained in Afghanistan in the early 1990s and fought with an Islamist group in Algeria's decade-long civil war before joining another group that became known as al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).
He financed his militant activity by snatching and ransoming foreigners, including the kidnapping of two Westerners working for the United Nations, and was known for his prolific smuggling of cigarettes and other goods across the porous borders of North Africa and the Sahel. He gained local support by marrying into local tribes.
Given his stature, intelligence officials thought Belmokhtar would be harder to replace than militants from groups with a deeper bench, such as the Islamic State. It made him an attractive target.
In 2003, the U.S. government considered trying to kill Belmokhtar from the air in northern Mali, but concerns about the potential political backlash stopped that attack.
A decade later, militants under his command laid siege to a gas plant in Algeria, killing three Americans. That prompted U.S. prosecutors to bring charges against Belmokhtar in a federal court in New York.
FBI agents and prosecutors in New York had hoped to charge him prior to the refinery attack, but the criminal complaint sat at the Justice Department awaiting approval for years before he was finally indicted.
A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.
Belmokhtar "continued to push the envelope of jihadi activity in the Sahara and North Africa," including pioneering the use of ransom and large-scale coordinated attacks in that area, said Geoff Porter, president of North Africa Risk Consulting.
A charismatic, ambitious figure, the 43-year-old Belmokhtar clashed with others in the African al-Qaida outfit and twice helped form new splinter brigades, known as al-Mulathameen and, more recently, al-Murabitoun.
African allies had tried - and failed - to capture him. In 2013, the government in Chad announced his death in an operation in Mali, but he later resurfaced. There were other false reports of this death.
"We've been after this guy for a long time," the former senior U.S. official said. "There were moments where we knew where he was, or thought we knew, but couldn't get the bureaucracy together to act or to support allies" quickly enough.
According to a former Pentagon official, U.S. military leaders for years resisted going after Belmokhtar, who they then saw as a peripheral threat, as they struggled to manage the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Before the June strike, U.S. officials said, they had been tracking Belmokhtar on and off for several years, including in southwest Libya. In that hunt, the United States worked closely with France, drawing on its historic military and intelligence presence in that region.
While the process for high-value strikes varies, U.S. military officials use a standard "find, fix, finish" procedure. Once a target is located, officials must show that they can avoid unintended civilian casualties. Targeters must then "fix" the militant, meaning surveillance must continue until the strike, or "finish," takes place.
"We are very, very careful about doing these properly," a Defense official said. "There's no appetite to make a tactical gain to risk a strategic loss."
Officials thought that the others at the Ajdabiya meeting that June night - fewer than 10 - were militants and legitimate targets. The strike went ahead.
As soon as the American fighter jets dropped their lethal cargo, the scramble began to determine the operation's outcome.
U.S. officials say that, ideally, they would use DNA analysis retrieved from an attack site to establish a militant's identity, as they did following the raid that killed al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden.
In most cases, though, their "battlefield damage assessment" is done using intelligence means. To get to jackpot, officials require multiple, high-confidence sources. It is uncertain work: Officials sort through clues relayed in private communications and public statements by militant groups, trying to slice through misinformation.
In such cases, a senior defense official said, the bureaucracy is "trying to balance across all the evidence."
Usually, a definitive conclusion can be reached quickly. In November, after U.S. planes targeted Abu Nabil al-Anbari, the head of the Islamic State's Libya cell, the Pentagon was able to confirm his death in a matter of weeks. Officials reached a conclusive determination in a similar time frame after a strike in Syria last fall targeting Mohammed Emwazi, the British militant known as "Jihadi John."
But occasionally, it is more difficult. In 2007, the Pentagon sent a small team of U.S. forces into Somalia to determine whether Aden Ayrow, a senior Somali militant, had been killed in an airstrike; several months later, he was named head of al-Qaida operations and called for foreigners to be slain. Another operation killed him the following year.
In 2009, a CIA drone strike in Pakistan was thought to have killed Saad bin Laden, the al-Qaida's founder's son, but it took intercepted family communication to confirm it.
"If we don't get [confirmation] right away it becomes very hard," another defense official said. "And it becomes harder with time."
Jaffer, of the ACLU, said that was even more true with so-called signature strikes, in which officials authorize attacks based on patterns suggesting militant activity rather than information about a specific suspect.
In those cases, "they don't know the identities before, and they don't know the identities after," he said.
The human cost of erroneous targeting is high. In 2014, the United States paid more than $1 million in compensation to families of a wedding party killed in an errant strike in Yemen.
The difficulty of confirming outcomes in many places may be one reason why U.S. officials have sometimes opted for Special Operations raids instead of drone strikes.
After the strike in Ajdabiya, officials were encouraged when they learned that at least one of Belmokhtar's wives, a woman who had recently given birth to his youngest child, had returned home to her family. Even more tantalizing, an individual close to Belmokhtar called people to attend a gathering mourning his death.
In October, an Algerian TV channel carried a message from an al-Qaida spokesman that implied Belmokhtar was dead.
Based in part on those clues, officials at the State Department and FBI felt confident that Belmokhtar had been killed. Early this year, the State Department went as far as to quietly remove him from its "most wanted" list; the FBI followed suit.
Equally confident were officials at JSOC, who were satisfied that they had been built an accurate case for the strike in the first place.
In the days following the strike, a Pentagon spokesman told news organizations that initial reporting suggested the Algerian was dead.
For those officials, the fact that Belmokhtar's body had not been recovered was unsurprising, given the size of the bombs dropped on the desert compound. Some officials thought Belmokhtar may have survived the initial attack but died later of his wounds.
"When we get to 100 percent, we'll make a 100 percent-level statement," the senior defense official said.
But at the U.S. Africa Command, the regional command in charge of Libya, some officers were less sure. Officials there knew they would be held accountable if there was a hasty declaration and Belmokhtar resurfaced. They wanted to hold off, and requested more analysis from intelligence agencies.
Both AFRICOM, U.S. Special Operations Command - which oversees JSOC - and the CIA declined to comment on the operation.
There were reasons to doubt that Belmokhtar was killed. According to local reports, at least five wounded people were pulled from the rubble and taken to a local hospital. Another three were found dead.
Ansar al-Sharia, a local Islamist group, released the names of seven of its militants whom it said were killed, but Belmokhtar was not among them. Several other groups denied that Belmokhtar had been killed; AQIM said he was "alive and well."
Ibrahim Jathran, an influential militia leader in Ajdabiya, said the wounded, known to authorities, were mostly locals and perhaps one Tunisian. "We wish Belmokhtar had been killed, but there's no proof this was the case," Jathran said in an interview last fall.
Rudolph Atallah, a former Africa counterterrorism director at the Pentagon, said another reason for skepticism was the fact that the strike was not followed by statements from Belmokhtar's followers celebrating his death.
"That's their ultimate graduation," he said. "Martyrdom is important to these people - it's what they live for."
As time went on, there were other reasons to doubt. Later last summer, al-Murabitoun released a statement saying Belmokhtar had been selected as the leader of the latest iteration of its jihadist group. Such reports have fueled increasing doubt about the operation's outcome for many U.S. intelligence officials.
In November, after militants killed at least 20 people at a Mali hotel in what appeared to be a joint operation by al-Murabitoun, AQIM and another militant group, France's defense minister said Belmokhtar was thought to be alive and was probably behind the bloody assault.
In mid-January, militants associated with al-Murabitoun launched an attack on a hotel and cafe in Burkina Faso.
For now, American officials continue to watch for definitive signs he is dead - or alive.
One intelligence official said he remained "pretty confident" Belmokhtar was dead. "But there is room for error, and he's a wily character," the official said. "I wouldn't be surprised if he popped back up."
© 2016 The Washington Post
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Mokhtar Belmokhtar, a legendary Algerian militant, had eluded capture across North Africa and the Sahel for a dozen years, defying reports of his death to continue a campaign of kidnappings and guerrilla attacks. The United States and its allies had missed him before.
But in June of last year, JSOC, the secretive military outfit tasked with hunting al-Qaida, thought it had Belmokhtar in its sights as he made his way to a dusty farm outside of Ajdabiya, in eastern Libya, where a group of militants assembled for a meeting.
American officials had been on high alert for several days.
Belmokhtar and his associates were famously disciplined in avoiding electronic communications and cloaking their movements, but someone had slipped up. When two American F-15 jets screamed across the sky and unleashed several 500-pound bombs, they demolished the farmhouse, killing at least five militants.
But eight months later, U.S. military and intelligence agencies remain unsure whether Belmokhtar was indeed killed in the operation. The internal debate that followed the strike illustrates the challenges inherent to targeted attacks in places where the United States has little military presence, such as Libya, Syria, Yemen or Pakistan.
"We took a shot, but we could never really confirm his demise," said one U.S. official who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberations.
As President Barack Obama prepares to step down, the uncertainty highlights the sometimes limited intelligence surrounding strikes that have become a hallmark of his response to militant threats overseas.
Inconclusive outcomes such as this one may become more common if the next president builds on Obama's counterterrorism strategy, which has sought to minimize U.S. troop deployments by employing Special Operations raids and airstrikes to target scores of jihadists from South Asia to Africa in recent years.
Civil liberties activists have also been pressing for more details about targeted killings. A federal appeals court on Wednesday heard arguments about whether the government should be more transparent about drone strikes in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.
While many officials are confident that Belmokhtar was killed, the reservations of other officials have been sufficient to stop the Obama administration from declaring "jackpot" - in military jargon, a conclusive hit against a militant target.
The possibility that Belmokhtar was not among those killed or wounded that day raises troubling questions about who the strike may have killed in his stead, and how the attack may have affected his followers, who have launched several bloody attacks since last fall.
Emily Horne, a White House spokeswoman, said that the Obama administration would continue to work to stop militant plots against the United States "whenever it is necessary, using the full range of tools at our disposal."
One former senior official said that the remote strikes were one of the few tools the United States could use in areas that do not permit an on-the-ground U.S. presence. Precision munitions launched by drones or high-tech fighter jets, advocates say, mean less collateral damage than bombing raids of days past. "The problem is that they are going to take place in areas that are ungoverned and . . . you don't have a clear partner" who can help verify the outcome.
Adding to the complexity, the U.S. government often has little visibility in those areas.
"There's a broader issue relating to the limits of their intelligence capabilities," said Jameel Jaffer, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union. "There's only so much you can learn from surveillance conducted from 15,000 feet, and their human intelligence is very limited in some of the places where they're carrying out strikes."
The June 14 strike was the culmination of a years-long international effort against Belmokhtar, also known as "Mr. Marlboro," "the Uncatchable" and "the One-Eyed" for the disfigurement he suffered to his face handling weapons as a young man.
A native of Algeria, Belmokhtar trained in Afghanistan in the early 1990s and fought with an Islamist group in Algeria's decade-long civil war before joining another group that became known as al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).
He financed his militant activity by snatching and ransoming foreigners, including the kidnapping of two Westerners working for the United Nations, and was known for his prolific smuggling of cigarettes and other goods across the porous borders of North Africa and the Sahel. He gained local support by marrying into local tribes.
Given his stature, intelligence officials thought Belmokhtar would be harder to replace than militants from groups with a deeper bench, such as the Islamic State. It made him an attractive target.
In 2003, the U.S. government considered trying to kill Belmokhtar from the air in northern Mali, but concerns about the potential political backlash stopped that attack.
A decade later, militants under his command laid siege to a gas plant in Algeria, killing three Americans. That prompted U.S. prosecutors to bring charges against Belmokhtar in a federal court in New York.
FBI agents and prosecutors in New York had hoped to charge him prior to the refinery attack, but the criminal complaint sat at the Justice Department awaiting approval for years before he was finally indicted.
A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.
Belmokhtar "continued to push the envelope of jihadi activity in the Sahara and North Africa," including pioneering the use of ransom and large-scale coordinated attacks in that area, said Geoff Porter, president of North Africa Risk Consulting.
A charismatic, ambitious figure, the 43-year-old Belmokhtar clashed with others in the African al-Qaida outfit and twice helped form new splinter brigades, known as al-Mulathameen and, more recently, al-Murabitoun.
African allies had tried - and failed - to capture him. In 2013, the government in Chad announced his death in an operation in Mali, but he later resurfaced. There were other false reports of this death.
"We've been after this guy for a long time," the former senior U.S. official said. "There were moments where we knew where he was, or thought we knew, but couldn't get the bureaucracy together to act or to support allies" quickly enough.
According to a former Pentagon official, U.S. military leaders for years resisted going after Belmokhtar, who they then saw as a peripheral threat, as they struggled to manage the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Before the June strike, U.S. officials said, they had been tracking Belmokhtar on and off for several years, including in southwest Libya. In that hunt, the United States worked closely with France, drawing on its historic military and intelligence presence in that region.
While the process for high-value strikes varies, U.S. military officials use a standard "find, fix, finish" procedure. Once a target is located, officials must show that they can avoid unintended civilian casualties. Targeters must then "fix" the militant, meaning surveillance must continue until the strike, or "finish," takes place.
"We are very, very careful about doing these properly," a Defense official said. "There's no appetite to make a tactical gain to risk a strategic loss."
Officials thought that the others at the Ajdabiya meeting that June night - fewer than 10 - were militants and legitimate targets. The strike went ahead.
As soon as the American fighter jets dropped their lethal cargo, the scramble began to determine the operation's outcome.
U.S. officials say that, ideally, they would use DNA analysis retrieved from an attack site to establish a militant's identity, as they did following the raid that killed al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden.
In most cases, though, their "battlefield damage assessment" is done using intelligence means. To get to jackpot, officials require multiple, high-confidence sources. It is uncertain work: Officials sort through clues relayed in private communications and public statements by militant groups, trying to slice through misinformation.
In such cases, a senior defense official said, the bureaucracy is "trying to balance across all the evidence."
Usually, a definitive conclusion can be reached quickly. In November, after U.S. planes targeted Abu Nabil al-Anbari, the head of the Islamic State's Libya cell, the Pentagon was able to confirm his death in a matter of weeks. Officials reached a conclusive determination in a similar time frame after a strike in Syria last fall targeting Mohammed Emwazi, the British militant known as "Jihadi John."
But occasionally, it is more difficult. In 2007, the Pentagon sent a small team of U.S. forces into Somalia to determine whether Aden Ayrow, a senior Somali militant, had been killed in an airstrike; several months later, he was named head of al-Qaida operations and called for foreigners to be slain. Another operation killed him the following year.
In 2009, a CIA drone strike in Pakistan was thought to have killed Saad bin Laden, the al-Qaida's founder's son, but it took intercepted family communication to confirm it.
"If we don't get [confirmation] right away it becomes very hard," another defense official said. "And it becomes harder with time."
Jaffer, of the ACLU, said that was even more true with so-called signature strikes, in which officials authorize attacks based on patterns suggesting militant activity rather than information about a specific suspect.
In those cases, "they don't know the identities before, and they don't know the identities after," he said.
The human cost of erroneous targeting is high. In 2014, the United States paid more than $1 million in compensation to families of a wedding party killed in an errant strike in Yemen.
The difficulty of confirming outcomes in many places may be one reason why U.S. officials have sometimes opted for Special Operations raids instead of drone strikes.
After the strike in Ajdabiya, officials were encouraged when they learned that at least one of Belmokhtar's wives, a woman who had recently given birth to his youngest child, had returned home to her family. Even more tantalizing, an individual close to Belmokhtar called people to attend a gathering mourning his death.
In October, an Algerian TV channel carried a message from an al-Qaida spokesman that implied Belmokhtar was dead.
Based in part on those clues, officials at the State Department and FBI felt confident that Belmokhtar had been killed. Early this year, the State Department went as far as to quietly remove him from its "most wanted" list; the FBI followed suit.
Equally confident were officials at JSOC, who were satisfied that they had been built an accurate case for the strike in the first place.
In the days following the strike, a Pentagon spokesman told news organizations that initial reporting suggested the Algerian was dead.
For those officials, the fact that Belmokhtar's body had not been recovered was unsurprising, given the size of the bombs dropped on the desert compound. Some officials thought Belmokhtar may have survived the initial attack but died later of his wounds.
"When we get to 100 percent, we'll make a 100 percent-level statement," the senior defense official said.
But at the U.S. Africa Command, the regional command in charge of Libya, some officers were less sure. Officials there knew they would be held accountable if there was a hasty declaration and Belmokhtar resurfaced. They wanted to hold off, and requested more analysis from intelligence agencies.
Both AFRICOM, U.S. Special Operations Command - which oversees JSOC - and the CIA declined to comment on the operation.
There were reasons to doubt that Belmokhtar was killed. According to local reports, at least five wounded people were pulled from the rubble and taken to a local hospital. Another three were found dead.
Ansar al-Sharia, a local Islamist group, released the names of seven of its militants whom it said were killed, but Belmokhtar was not among them. Several other groups denied that Belmokhtar had been killed; AQIM said he was "alive and well."
Ibrahim Jathran, an influential militia leader in Ajdabiya, said the wounded, known to authorities, were mostly locals and perhaps one Tunisian. "We wish Belmokhtar had been killed, but there's no proof this was the case," Jathran said in an interview last fall.
Rudolph Atallah, a former Africa counterterrorism director at the Pentagon, said another reason for skepticism was the fact that the strike was not followed by statements from Belmokhtar's followers celebrating his death.
"That's their ultimate graduation," he said. "Martyrdom is important to these people - it's what they live for."
As time went on, there were other reasons to doubt. Later last summer, al-Murabitoun released a statement saying Belmokhtar had been selected as the leader of the latest iteration of its jihadist group. Such reports have fueled increasing doubt about the operation's outcome for many U.S. intelligence officials.
In November, after militants killed at least 20 people at a Mali hotel in what appeared to be a joint operation by al-Murabitoun, AQIM and another militant group, France's defense minister said Belmokhtar was thought to be alive and was probably behind the bloody assault.
In mid-January, militants associated with al-Murabitoun launched an attack on a hotel and cafe in Burkina Faso.
For now, American officials continue to watch for definitive signs he is dead - or alive.
One intelligence official said he remained "pretty confident" Belmokhtar was dead. "But there is room for error, and he's a wily character," the official said. "I wouldn't be surprised if he popped back up."
© 2016 The Washington Post
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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